plural would have become homophones in Proto-Brythonic, and in this case the plural was generalized. *ster f pl (singulative *sterenn) stars Old Breton:...
*fruɨθ m fruit The Latin long vowel ū would ordinarily result in Proto-Brythonic *ʉ. The Brythonic reflexes require *u, which may suggest a Latin frŭctus; however...
*iwos m yew *eburos Proto-Brythonic: *ɨwī pl, *ɨwɨnā (collective) Breton: ivin (collective) Old Cornish: hiuin Cornish: ywin Welsh: yw pl Gaulish: *iwos →...
Latin salsus (“salty, salted”), cognate with Proto-Brythonic *haluɨn (“salt”), *heli (“brine”). *selsig f pl (singulative *selsigenn) sausages Middle Breton:...
Proto-Celtic: *dakrū (plural or collective) < *dáḱruh₂ pl Proto-Brythonic: *dėgr Middle Welsh: deigyr Welsh: deigr (archaic) ⇒ Welsh: deigryn Proto-Germanic:...
field *mages-tus Proto-Brythonic: *maɣes Breton: maez Cornish: mes Old Welsh: maessid pl Middle Welsh: maes Welsh: maes Proto-Brythonic: *maɣ Old Breton:...
(“feathers”). *plʉβ̃ m pl or f pl (singulative *plʉβ̃ɨnn, *plʉβ̃enn) feathers The descendant terms in the three Old Brythonic languages are not directly...
From Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr (“star”). *sterā f star Proto-Brythonic: *ster pl Old Breton: *ster Middle Breton: ster Breton: ster Old Cornish: *ster...
gender, depending on the sex of the specific animal referred to. Proto-Brythonic: *mox pl Breton: moch Breton: moch Breton: moc'h Middle Cornish: mogh Cornish:...
Proto-Indo-European *wēs, a variant form of *wos, the oblique plural of *túh₂ (“you”). *swīs (accusative *swes, singular *tū) you pl *swiswis Proto-Brythonic:...